How to Choose Art For Your Home

Choosing the right wall art can transform a space — adding personality, balance, and visual interest. Whether you prefer bold retro prints or subtle vintage designs, the right artwork helps bring your interior together. Different rooms call for different moods. Living rooms benefit from statement pieces, while bedrooms often work best with calmer, more cohesive designs. From retro graphic art to music-inspired prints, your wall art should reflect your interests and taste. Vintage and retro styles work particularly well in both modern and eclectic interiors. Large framed prints can anchor a room, while smaller pieces work beautifully in gallery walls. Measure your space before choosing artwork to ensure balance and proportion. Professionally framed wall art instantly elevates the look of a room. A quality frame adds structure, polish, and longevity — making your artwork feel complete.

Choosing art for your home is part personal, part practical.
The best choices make your space feel more like you while working with the room you’re putting them in.
Here’s a clear, step-by-step way to approach it.

1. Start With What You Love

Art isn’t just décor—it’s something you live with.

  • Choose pieces that spark emotion, curiosity, or calm.

  • Don’t buy something just because it matches the sofa or is “on trend.”

  • If you keep thinking about a piece days later, that’s usually a good sign.

2. Think About the Mood of Each Room

Different spaces benefit from different energy.

  • Living room: Conversation-starting or bold pieces work well.

  • Bedroom: Calming, intimate, or soothing art.

  • Kitchen/dining: Playful, graphic, or food-inspired art.

  • Office: Motivating, structured, or intellectually engaging work.

Let the room’s purpose guide the emotional tone.

3. Get the Scale Right

Size matters more than people expect.

  • Large walls need large art (or a well-planned gallery wall).

  • Small art floating alone on a big wall often looks lost.

  • Over furniture, art should be about ⅔ to ¾ the width of the piece below it.

If you’re unsure, tape paper outlines on the wall to test proportions.

4. Coordinate (Don’t Match) Colors

Your art doesn’t need to match your room—it should connect to it.

  • Pull 1–2 colors from your space that appear in the artwork.

  • Neutral rooms can handle bolder art.

  • Colorful rooms often benefit from art with breathing room (whites, blacks, soft tones).

Contrast usually looks more sophisticated than perfect matching.

5. Mix Styles Thoughtfully

Homes feel more personal when art isn’t all the same.

  • Mix photography with paintings or prints.

  • Pair modern art with vintage frames (or vice versa).

  • Don’t be afraid to blend high and low—originals and prints can coexist beautifully.

What matters is balance, not uniformity.

6. Build Slowly

You don’t need to fill every wall at once.

  • Collect over time as your taste evolves.

  • Leave some walls intentionally empty.

  • Rearranging art periodically can make your home feel refreshed without buying anything new.

7. Trust Your Instincts

If a piece makes you stop, smile, or feel something—that’s the right art.
Guests will notice authenticity far more than perfect coordination.

Explore our collection of framed art prints to find artwork that fits your home perfectly.